TeNDeR COMRaDe – WHITE RaBBIT GaLLERY

Hosted by member
Hosted by member

Chinese history wasn’t always straight. While queerness may seem like a foreign import, its roots in China date back to ancient times.

Tender Comrade

Bisexuality was the norm among emperors—Emperor Ai of the Han dynasty, for instance, openly took a ‘male favourite’. This was part of a broader history of same-sex relationships, non-normative sexualities and transgender identities that have largely been forgotten. Queer pasts are actively erased so that queer futures may cease to exist.

Although homosexuality was decriminalised in China in 1997, it had previously been classified as a crime under the offence of ‘hooliganism’. Today, lesbian and gay spaces continue to face closures due to ‘official pressure’, queer activists and organisers are subjected to police questioning, LGBTQIA+ representation is censored across the media, and ‘lavender marriages’ between queer men and women persist due to familial expectations.

Despite these constraints, queer communities endure. They call themselves tongzhi (同志), or ‘comrade’. The term was first popularised in the early twentieth century by Sun Yat-sen, father of the Republic of China, to unify people in revolution. Later, the Communist Party adopted it as a genderless, classless form of address. In 1989, the gay and lesbian community adopted it as their own — and it has remained ever since.

White Rabbit Gallery

The White Rabbit Gallery was opened in 2009 to showcase what has become one of the world’s most significant collections of Chinese contemporary art.

Event dates

18 June 202516 November 2025

Location

30 Balfour St, Chippendale NSW 2008

Contact

(02) 8399 2867

Bookings

Book online